Watts Building (1888): Difference between revisions

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* Room 14: [[Laura E. Burton]] and [[Irene Bullard]], physicians (1906)
* Room 14: [[Laura E. Burton]] and [[Irene Bullard]], physicians (1906)
* Room 15: [[Breeding & Whilldin]], architects (1904), [[H. D. Breeding]] (1925)
* Room 15: [[Breeding & Whilldin]], architects (1904), [[H. D. Breeding]] (1925)
* Room 24: [[D'Agostino School of Music]] (1925)


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 17:03, 15 November 2015

O. V. Hunt photograph of the Watts Building

The first Watts Building was a richly ornamented four-story Second-Empire style commercial building on the northwest corner of 3rd Avenue North and 20th Street in downtown Birmingham. It was constructed for Thomas Watts III by Charles M. Allen and Son in 1888. The building was designed by Charles Wheelock of Wheelock & Wheelock in the Second Empire style, with a rusticated base, grouped windows with brick arches on the second and third floors, and a deep cornice with a mansard roof above.

In 1927 Watts hired Allen & Son to demolish the 39-year-old building to make room for a new 17-story tower on the same site.

Tenants

Early tenants in the Watts building included architect J. W. McClain and the Eubank Brothers' dental parlor. In 1905 chemist Jefferson J. Peek opened his Peek Beverage Company in the Watts Building.

Among the law firms with offices in the Watts Building were Heflin & Bulger; James Little; L. C. Dickey and J. F. Gillespie; and Brooks & Brooks.

References